@High School Physics Explained .. .. 1:42 Wonderful. You said "Wrench" perfectly, with a proper accent and everything. . When I was in Aussie with my Canadian accent, I asked a digga, "How does my accent sound to you? .. He said that I stumble over my "Rs". "OK," I said, "But you don't pronounce your 'Rs' at all." .. . Not that it matters. .. Thanks for the free lessons. ..
Great video. The concept of torque can be explained without mentioning "cross product," but a full understanding has to mention it since both the radius and force are both vectors. In other words, torque = r X F which of course results in a vector given that both r and F are vectors. And the order matters such that torque cannot simply be written as F X r which would be a different vector. The magnitudes of the vectors can be multiplied, yes, but that doesn't give the direction of the torque vector. Torque is a fascinating idea.
You happen to have an aura around you, man. The kind I wish to have in my older days. Keep it up. Why did I find you so late? Never mind. It's always better to be late than never.
Hey paul, I'm interested in knowing how exactly this works- how distance from center increases rotational force, or perhaps you know an equation that proves it? Thank you very much!
its cuz of circle and radiys thing if you increase the radius less force is required because with a large radius the cirmference is so big that to even move a few degree large distance needa to be travelled so less force. its like lever
If calculating the torque, the equation used is similar (at least in the measurements used distance and force) to that of work. So is the amount of torque also the amount of work, which would be measured in Joules? Can Torque be measured in Joules or must it always be measured as Nm?
You have to be careful here. Although they do have the same unit (Nm) energy and torque are different things. For starters the distance in torque is the radius. With work, it’s the displacement, and in the case of circular motion, it’s the circumference. There is a relationship between the two. Power, which is the rate of change of energy, is equal to torque x angular velocity, and so energy equals torque x angular displacement.
Hi sir. Your explanations are great. Can you please explain or upload a video for the direction of torque with a real life example. I am not actually getting that concept of direction of torque.
This confused the hell out of me, too, and I REALLY wish Paul and other people teaching the right hand rule would explain this right as they explain it - there is NO reason it is "perpendicular" to the actual turning, because it's actually physically not, or the specific direction is completely arbitrary, at least. Apparently this is just a standard convention to make doing math formulas and diagrams easier - you could, for example, have a "left hand" rule, and all your math would work out exactly the same as long as you were consistent. REALLY wish more teachers would mention this, because it makes it needlessly confusing when they don't. Sorry this answer is a year late, hahah. : \
I've never understood torque until now thank you so much!
@High School Physics Explained ..
.. 1:42 Wonderful. You said "Wrench" perfectly, with a proper accent and everything. . When I was in Aussie with my Canadian accent, I asked a digga, "How does my accent sound to you? .. He said that I stumble over my "Rs". "OK," I said, "But you don't pronounce your 'Rs' at all." .. . Not that it matters. .. Thanks for the free lessons. ..
Haha
I did work in the US for three years. Guess it paid off
This video should be higher in the search results. Everyone else says the same thing as one another, but don't explain it this clearly.
Great video. The concept of torque can be explained without mentioning "cross product," but a full understanding has to mention it since both the radius and force are both vectors. In other words, torque = r X F which of course results in a vector given that both r and F are vectors. And the order matters such that torque cannot simply be written as F X r which would be a different vector. The magnitudes of the vectors can be multiplied, yes, but that doesn't give the direction of the torque vector. Torque is a fascinating idea.
I'm so glad you made the clarification what you call a "spanner", we in the U.S. call a "wrench".
best explaination on yt.
Excellent!
Better than my physics teachers ever could!
Torque is one of those things you understand but you can’t explain it 😂
just can't torque about it
@@christinemin3723 nice one!!
It can be explained, but the layman will not understand it.
@@arjunraj5305 do have any sources?
Mechanical advantages.
You happen to have an aura around you, man.
The kind I wish to have in my older days.
Keep it up.
Why did I find you so late?
Never mind. It's always better to be late than never.
Thank you sir I have understood the topic
Finally, a great explanation!
Thanks
I swear
Really handy video . .
Talk the torque that really got me😂
🤓
so if the torque direction is down means the nail going down also? Like you tighten it. thank you
Sir can you please explain the starting torque and the normal torque in an AC motor .
Ha, that introduction was hilarious! Great video.
Thank you for sharing, greetings from Costa Rica.
After complition of my engineering I understood torque tq sir
Stop being Gandhi 👊
Very good explanation . Thank you
Glad it was helpful!
Hey paul, I'm interested in knowing how exactly this works- how distance from center increases rotational force, or perhaps you know an equation that proves it?
Thank you very much!
its cuz of circle and radiys thing if you increase the radius less force is required because with a large radius the cirmference is so big that to even move a few degree large distance needa to be travelled so less force. its like lever
Wow you just clear my doubts
This is extremely well done Very helpful Thank you
You’re welcome and thanks
excellent sir you help me keep on updating me
If calculating the torque, the equation used is similar (at least in the measurements used distance and force) to that of work. So is the amount of torque also the amount of work, which would be measured in Joules? Can Torque be measured in Joules or must it always be measured as Nm?
You have to be careful here. Although they do have the same unit (Nm) energy and torque are different things. For starters the distance in torque is the radius. With work, it’s the displacement, and in the case of circular motion, it’s the circumference. There is a relationship between the two. Power, which is the rate of change of energy, is equal to torque x angular velocity, and so energy equals torque x angular displacement.
Great explanation!
Thank you for this video it really helped me
You’re welcome
Excellent video
thank you
whats the difference between moment of force and torque ??
Hi sir. Your explanations are great. Can you please explain or upload a video for the direction of torque with a real life example. I am not actually getting that concept of direction of torque.
I don't understand why torque points perpendicularly to the actual turning. Why isn't it just a magnitude? Why does it need a direction?
This confused the hell out of me, too, and I REALLY wish Paul and other people teaching the right hand rule would explain this right as they explain it - there is NO reason it is "perpendicular" to the actual turning, because it's actually physically not, or the specific direction is completely arbitrary, at least. Apparently this is just a standard convention to make doing math formulas and diagrams easier - you could, for example, have a "left hand" rule, and all your math would work out exactly the same as long as you were consistent.
REALLY wish more teachers would mention this, because it makes it needlessly confusing when they don't. Sorry this answer is a year late, hahah. : \
What's it called when the force comes from the inside to lift the lever . Like a mechanical boom gate?
Smaller wrench 🔧 requires larger foot 🦶
Wonderful.
Thanks
Awesome
This guy is the Dave Jones (EEVBlog) of physics
you are awsome👍👍👍
Thanks
Well i just got it what is torque. thanks alot
someone pls say why torque depends on length of axis
More length more force more torque
.... I can't unsee
Nice spanners
Another joke, sorry = If you use right hand threads down there, why do you drive on the wrong side of the road? [Sorry, I'm Canadian.]